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Title: MK1775, a selective Wee1 inhibitor, shows single-agent antitumor activity against sarcoma cells. Author: Kreahling JM, Gemmer JY, Reed D, Letson D, Bui M, Altiok S. Journal: Mol Cancer Ther; 2012 Jan; 11(1):174-82. PubMed ID: 22084170. Abstract: Wee1 is a critical component of the G(2)-M cell-cycle checkpoint control and mediates cell-cycle arrest by regulating the phosphorylation of CDC2. Inhibition of Wee1 by a selective small molecule inhibitor MK1775 can abrogate G(2)-M checkpoint, resulting in premature mitotic entry and cell death. MK1775 has recently been tested in preclinical and clinical studies of human carcinoma to enhance the cytotoxic effect of DNA-damaging agents. However, its role in mesenchymal tumors, especially as a single agent, has not been explored. Here, we studied the cytotoxic effect of MK1775 in various sarcoma cell lines and patient-derived tumor explants ex vivo. Our data show that MK1775 treatment at clinically relevant concentrations leads to unscheduled entry into mitosis and initiation of apoptotic cell death in all sarcomas tested. In MK1775-treated cells, CDC2 activity was enhanced, as determined by decreased inhibitory phosphorylation of tyrosine-15 residue and increased expression of phosphorylated histone H3, a marker of mitotic entry. The cytotoxic effect of Wee1 inhibition on sarcoma cells seems to be independent of p53 status as all sarcoma cell lines with different p53 mutation were highly sensitive to MK1775 treatment. Finally, in patient-derived sarcoma samples, we showed that MK1775 as a single agent causes significant apoptotic cell death, suggesting that Wee1 inhibition may represent a novel approach in the treatment of sarcomas.[Abstract] [Full Text] [Related] [New Search]